By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Distinguish tap, fibrous, and adventitious root systems and their modifications
  • 2Identify stem and leaf modifications with examples
  • 3Describe venation, phyllotaxy, and leaf types
  • 4Compare racemose and cymose inflorescences
  • 5Describe flower whorls, symmetry, ovary position, and fruit/seed types
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Why this chapter matters
Morphology is the language of plant identification. Knowing the structure and modifications of roots, stems, leaves, inflorescences, flowers, fruits, and seeds lets you identify and classify plants and understand how they adapt to their environments -- a core NEET topic.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Morphology of Flowering Plants

'The study of form reveals function — morphology is the foundation of plant biology.' — Botany

1. Chapter Overview

MORPHOLOGY is the study of EXTERNAL form and structure. In flowering plants (Angiosperms), the body is DIVIDED into ROOT, STEM, LEAF, FLOWER, and FRUIT. This chapter examines EACH part in detail — its TYPICAL structure, VARIATIONS, and IMPORTANT modifications. Understanding morphology is ESSENTIAL for plant identification, classification, and understanding plant adaptations.


2. The Root System

Tap Root System

  • PRIMARY root (radicle) grows downward → LATERAL roots (secondary, tertiary)
  • Characteristics: Dicotyledons (Mustard, Mango, Banyan)
  • Tap root: Thick, grows vertically; Branches arise from it

Fibrous Root System

  • Primary root SHORT-LIVED; replaced by MANY roots from stem base
  • Characteristics: Monocotyledons (Wheat, Rice, Maize, Onion)

Adventitious Root System

  • Roots arise from PARTS OTHER than radicle (stem, leaves)
  • Examples: Banyan (prop roots), Maize (stilt roots), Rhizophora (pneumatophores — breathing roots)

Regions of a Root

  1. Root cap: PROTECTS root tip
  2. Meristematic region: Cell division (growth)
  3. Elongation region: Cells LENGTHEN
  4. Maturation region: Root hairs, DIFFERENTIATION into tissues

Root Modifications

TypeModificationFunctionExample
StorageSwollen tap rootsStore FOODCarrot, Radish, Beetroot
PropAerial roots from stemSUPPORTBanyan
StiltRoots from lower stemANCHORAGEMaize, Sugarcane
PneumatophoreVertical roots (above water)GAS EXCHANGERhizophora (mangrove)

3. The Stem

Characteristics

  • AERIAL part, Bears LEAVES, BUDS, FLOWERS, and FRUITS
  • Has NODES (leaf attachment) and INTERNODES
  • POSITIVE phototropism; NEGATIVE geotropism
  • Develops from PLUMULE

Stem Modifications

TypeExampleFunction
UndergroundPotato (tuber), Ginger (rhizome), Onion (bulb), Colocasia (corm)FOOD storage + Perennation
Aerial tendrilsGrapevine, PassionflowerCLIMBING
ThornsCitrus, BougainvilleaDEFENCE
PhyllocladeOpuntia (cactus), AsparagusPHOTOSYNTHESIS (green, flattened stem)

4. The Leaf

Structure

  • Leaf base: Attaches to node; may have STIPULES
  • Petiole: Stalk (present in petiolate; absent in sessile)
  • Lamina (Blade): Expanded GREEN part. Midrib, veins (reticulate/parallel)

Venation

TypePatternPlant group
ReticulateNet-likeDicotyledons
ParallelParallel veinsMonocotyledons

Leaf Types

  • Simple: Lamina UNDIVIDED (mango, banyan)
  • Compound: Lamina DIVIDED into leaflets
    • Pinnately compound: Leaflets on RACHIS (neem, rose)
    • Palmately compound: Leaflets radiate from TIP (cotton, silk cotton)

Phyllotaxy (Leaf Arrangement on Stem)

TypePatternExample
AlternateONE leaf per nodeSunflower, Mustard
OppositeTWO leaves per nodeCalotropis, Guava
WhorledTHREE+ leaves per nodeAlstonia

Leaf Modifications

ModificationFunctionExample
TendrilsClimbingPea
SpinesDefenceCactus
ScalesProtectionOnion bulb
Leaf pitcherInsect trappingNepenthes (pitcher plant)

5. The Inflorescence

Types

TypePatternExamples
RacemoseMain axis CONTINUES to grow; flowers in ACROPETAL successionMustard, Radish, Sunflower (head)
CymoseMain axis STOPS at a flower; flowers in BASIPETAL successionCotton, Jasmine, Carnation

Special Types

  • Spike: Sessile flowers (wheat, barley)
  • Head (Capitulum): Sunflower family
  • Catkin: Pendulous spike (willow)
  • Umbel: Flowers on equal stalks from one point (coriander)

6. The Flower (Essential for Reproduction)

Floral Parts (Four Whorls)

  1. Calyx (Sepals): Outermost, PROTECTIVE (green or coloured)
  2. Corolla (Petals): ATTRACTIVE, helps pollination
  3. Androecium (Stamens): MALE reproductive part (filament + anther)
  4. Gynoecium (Carpels/Pistils): FEMALE reproductive part (stigma + style + ovary)

Flower Symmetry

  • Actinomorphic: Radial symmetry (mustard, tulip)
  • Zygomorphic: Bilateral symmetry (pea, ocimum)

Position of Ovary (Floral Parts)

TypeOvary PositionExample
HypogynousSuperior ovary; above other whorlsMustard, China rose
PerigynousHalf-inferior; ovary surrounded by hypanthiumPlum, Rose
EpigynousInferior ovary; below other whorlsSunflower, Apple

7. The Fruit

  • Definition: Matured OVARY developed after FERTILISATION
  • Pericarp: Wall of fruit (epicarp, mesocarp, endocarp)
  • Types:
    • True fruit: From ovary only (mango, tomato)
    • False fruit (Pseudocarp): Other parts also contribute (apple, strawberry)
    • Parthenocarpic fruit: Without FERTILISATION (banana, grapes)

8. The Seed

Structure

  • Seed coat (Testa + Tegmen): Protective covering
  • Embryo: Radicle (future root) + Plumule (future shoot) + Cotyledons
  • Endosperm: Nutritive tissue
TypeExamples
Albuminous (with endosperm)Castor, Maize, Wheat
Exalbuminous (without endosperm)Pea, Bean, Groundnut

9. Common Mistakes

  1. Carrot and radish are NOT roots? They ARE tap roots modified for storage — you eat the ROOT, not stem
  2. Potato tuber is a STEM, not a root: It has NODES (eyes) — roots do not have nodes
  3. Flower parts are MODIFIED leaves: Sepals, petals, stamens, carpels are all derived from leaf primordia
  4. Apple is a FALSE fruit: The fleshy part is the THALAMUS, not the ovary wall
  5. Hypogynous ≠ epigynous: In hypogynous, ovary is ABOVE (superior); in epigynous, ovary is BELOW (inferior)

10. CBSE Exam Focus

  1. Root and stem modifications with examples (3/5-mark)
  2. Leaf — venation, phyllotaxy, modifications (3-mark)
  3. Inflorescence types — racemose vs cymose (3-mark)
  4. Flower structure — whorls, symmetry, ovary position (5-mark)
  5. Fruit types — true, false, parthenocarpic (1/3-mark)

11. Self-Test (5+ Q&A)

Q1: How would you distinguish a tuber (potato) from a root? A: Potato tuber has NODES (eyes) with buds — a characteristic of STEM. Roots do NOT have nodes or buds.

Q2: Differentiate between racemose and cymose inflorescence. A: Racemose: Main axis GROWS CONTINUOUSLY; flowers acropetal (oldest at bottom). Cymose: Axis STOPS at a flower; flowers basipetal (oldest at top).

Q3: What is a false fruit? Give one example. A: A fruit formed NOT only from the ovary but also from other floral parts (receptacle). Example: APPLE (fleshy part = thalamus; core = ovary).

Q4: What is phyllotaxy? Describe its types. A: Arrangement of leaves on stem. Types: alternate (one/node), opposite (two/node), whorled (three+/node).

Q5: Write the floral formula of a typical dicot flower with all whorls present and ovary superior. A: Br ⚥ % ⚥ K(5) C5 A5 G(2) (example of a generalised dicot — numbers may vary).


12. Conclusion

Plant morphology PROGRESSES from underground (root) → aerial (stem) → photosynthetic (leaf) → reproductive (flower → fruit → seed). Each structure is ADAPTED for specific functions — roots anchor and absorb, stems support and transport, leaves photosynthesise, flowers reproduce. MODIFICATIONS reveal how plants ADAPT to diverse environments. This morphological knowledge is the FOUNDATION for plant identification, taxonomy, and understanding the ECOLOGICAL roles of different plant species.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Root systems
Tap root (dicots); fibrous root (monocots); adventitious (from non-radicle parts)
Each modified for storage, support, or gas exchange.
Inflorescence types
Racemose (axis grows, acropetal) vs cymose (axis ends in a flower, basipetal)
Determines flowering order.
Ovary position
Hypogynous (superior), perigynous (half-inferior), epigynous (inferior)
Describes flower as hypo-/peri-/epigynous.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Calling a potato tuber a root
A potato is an underground stem -- it has nodes (eyes) with buds, which roots never have.
WATCH OUT
Thinking carrot and radish are stems
They are tap roots modified for storage; the edible part is the root.
WATCH OUT
Treating an apple as a true fruit
Apple is a false fruit (pseudocarp) -- the fleshy part develops from the thalamus, not the ovary wall.
WATCH OUT
Confusing hypogynous and epigynous flowers
Hypogynous has a superior ovary (above other whorls); epigynous has an inferior ovary (below them).

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Reasoning
How would you distinguish a potato tuber from a root?
Show solution
A potato tuber bears nodes (eyes) with buds, which is a feature of stems. Roots have no nodes or buds, so the potato is a modified underground stem.
Q2MEDIUM· Inflorescence
Differentiate between racemose and cymose inflorescence.
Show solution
In a racemose inflorescence the main axis grows continuously and flowers open in acropetal succession (oldest at the bottom). In a cymose inflorescence the main axis ends in a flower and growth continues from lateral buds, with flowers opening in basipetal succession (oldest at the top).
Q3EASY· Fruit
What is a false fruit? Give one example.
Show solution
A false fruit develops from floral parts in addition to the ovary, such as the thalamus. Example: apple, where the fleshy edible part is the thalamus.
Q4EASY· Leaf
What is phyllotaxy? Name its types.
Show solution
Phyllotaxy is the arrangement of leaves on the stem. Types: alternate (one leaf per node), opposite (two per node), and whorled (three or more per node).
Q5MEDIUM· Modifications
Give one example each of a storage root, a prop root, and a pneumatophore.
Show solution
Storage root: carrot (or radish/beetroot). Prop root: banyan. Pneumatophore: Rhizophora (mangrove breathing root).

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Tap root (dicots), fibrous root (monocots), adventitious roots (banyan, maize).
  • Stem modifications: tuber, rhizome, bulb, corm, tendril, thorn, phylloclade.
  • Venation: reticulate (dicots), parallel (monocots); phyllotaxy: alternate, opposite, whorled.
  • Inflorescence: racemose (acropetal) vs cymose (basipetal).
  • Flower whorls: calyx, corolla, androecium, gynoecium; symmetry actinomorphic or zygomorphic.
  • Ovary position: hypogynous, perigynous, epigynous.
  • Fruit: true, false (apple), parthenocarpic (banana); seeds albuminous or exalbuminous.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-8 marks across the chapter

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Flower structure3-51Whorls, symmetry, ovary position, floral formula
Modifications31Root, stem, and leaf modifications
Inflorescence / fruit2-31Racemose/cymose and fruit types
Prep strategy
  • Memorise modifications with examples in a table
  • Learn venation and phyllotaxy types
  • Compare racemose and cymose inflorescences
  • Practise reading and writing floral formulae

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Plant identification

Morphological features are the primary tools for identifying and classifying plants in the field.

Agriculture and horticulture

Knowing root, stem, and storage modifications guides cultivation of crops like potato, ginger, and carrot.

Understanding adaptations

Modifications reveal how plants adapt to climbing, defence, storage, or waterlogged habitats.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Use tables of modifications with examples
  2. State the rule before classifying ovary position
  3. Distinguish acropetal vs basipetal flowering
  4. Practise floral formulae for common families

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Construct floral formulae and diagrams for families like Fabaceae, Solanaceae, and Liliaceae.
  • Relate placentation types to ovary and fruit structure.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 11 Biology examHigh
NEET BiologyVery High

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Underground stems such as potato tubers, ginger rhizomes, and onion bulbs retain stem features: they have nodes and internodes, buds (the 'eyes' of a potato), and scale leaves. Roots lack nodes, internodes, and buds, though they may bear root hairs. So the presence of nodes and buds confirms that a structure is a modified stem, not a root.

A floral formula is a shorthand that summarises a flower's structure. Symbols indicate the bracts, symmetry (actinomorphic or zygomorphic), and sex of the flower, while letters with numbers represent the four whorls: K for calyx (sepals), C for corolla (petals), A for androecium (stamens), and G for gynoecium (carpels). Brackets show fusion and a line above or below G shows whether the ovary is inferior or superior. It lets botanists describe a flower compactly and compare families.
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Last reviewed on 29 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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